Late run lifts Heat past Pacers 97-94 in showdown

Miami Heat's Dwyane Wade (3) dunks over Indiana Pacers' Ian Mahinmi, left, and Paul George (24) during the second half of an NBA basketball game Wednesday in Miami. The Heat defeated the Pacers 97-94.Associated Press

Associated Press

MIAMI -- Dwyane Wade scored 32 points, Ray Allen hit a go-ahead 3-pointer with just under a minute left and the Miami Heat erased a 15-point deficit in the second half to beat the Indiana Pacers 97-94 on Wednesday night.

LeBron James scored 24 on a bad left ankle for the Heat, who closed within a game of the Eastern Conference-leading Pacers. Chris Bosh added 15 points for Miami, including a 3 that tied it late in the fourth.

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James set up Allen for the 3 that put Miami in front for good with 59.5 seconds left, capping a 10-0 run.

Paul George scored 25 points but missed a 3-pointer that would have tied it with 4 seconds left. David West had 23 and Lance Stephenson added 13 for the Pacers, who have dropped two straight.

Down by one, the Pacers saw their best chance go awry when George Hill turned the ball over on a bad pass with 14 seconds left. Allen made two free throws with 10.3 seconds remaining to put Miami up by three, and that capped a big comeback win for the two-time defending NBA champions.

Pacers center Roy Hibbert got his fourth foul early in the third, and Indiana coach Frank Vogel opted to leave him in the game. The gamble appeared to backfire 46 seconds later when Hibbert picked up his fifth with 8:34 remaining in the quarter.

Hibbert went to the bench -- but the Pacers didn't miss a beat.

George made three free throws after getting hit beyond the arc by Mario Chalmers to put Indiana up 66-51 midway through the third, and the Pacers' lead was still 14 with 4:17 left in the period.

But Norris Cole's 3-pointer, Miami's first in 10 tries to that point, started what became a 13-4 Heat run and made it a 76-71 game entering the fourth. Nonetheless, Indiana remained in control, and when West connected with 3:21 left, the Pacers were up 92-85 and seemed well on their way to closing things out.

And then the Heat -- for the first time all night -- put together a run.

The Heat scored the next 10 points -- Bosh's 3-pointer, his first in 15 attempts, tied it at 92. And after George missed in the lane at the other end, James brought the ball the other way and found Allen for a 3-pointer that put the Heat ahead for the first time since the score was 14-13.

They didn't trail again.

Even though the teams won't see each other again until March, and with the playoffs still 50-something games away, there was clearly a little more meaning to this one.

After all, those often-rugged playoff battles that went Miami's way the last two seasons aren't going to be forgotten anytime soon.

There was the requisite extracurricular activity; Stephenson and Chalmers getting technicals for exchanging unpleasantries, noted Pacers nemesis Udonis Haslem wagging a finger after finding himself in the middle of a heated discussion. But the simple fact that James was playing and Vogel was coaching spoke volumes about how much neither wanted to a take a night off in this rivalry.

James was questionable because of a bad ankle, the one he twisted in Monday's win over Utah. Vogel was questionable because of bad spaghetti -- at least, he thinks that's what caused a quick bout with illness that set in after he dined Tuesday night.

By game time, both pronounced themselves ready.

"Well enough to coach," Vogel said.

Said James: "I love games like this."

Stephenson had nine points and five rebounds in the first quarter as Indiana built a 26-22 lead, and a 10-2 push over the first 2:14 of the second extended the Pacers' cushion to 12. Miami eventually got within three, but another run -- this time a 14-4 flurry -- put Indiana up by 13 late in the half, and the Pacers went into the break with a 52-41 advantage.

NOTES: Pacers F Danny Granger, who has played in just five games since the start of last season because of injuries, will practice Thursday and is set to return to the lineup. "He's not going to be an All-Star player in the first three games. It's going to take time," Vogel said. ... James and Shane Battier both had a rebound in their hands midway through the third quarter, then watched the ball go out of bounds, unaware they were battling each other. ... Neither team has topped 100 points in the last six meetings, including playoff games.

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